Saturday, February 9, 2013

Start of a Duel (Buried in The Sun)

This post was co-authored by Daurade and Gid, who thank their friend, author and poet Jon Frankel, for his research assistance and editorial input.

For
years, rumors have swirled about a picture of Richard Fariña and Thomas
Pynchon dueling in a cemetery. We heard about this rumor, dug around,
and found that the picture is hidden in plain site on the Internet--but
we could not find that anyone had written about it. As we continued
digging, we learned that this photo was taken at a turbulent and fertile
period in Cornell's history. We found quite a bit of info on a
brilliant group of students working with brilliant professors. Some of
these students led a student protest which turned into a riot that some
people see as a precursor of the student activism of the '60s and '70s.

In
this post, we're going to examine the photo, but also Cornell in the
'50s, the bright students and professors and the turbulent times.

We'll
start by looking at how we came to this tale. Normally, we hate to read
reviews of books or films, concerts, etc. where the reviewer goes on
to describe his shenanigans in high school or the fact that she had a
cold on the day of a show. But seeing as this post began as an account
of a "quest" and not as a history lesson, a little bit of our own story
is in the mix.

We hope fans of Thomas Pynchon and
Richard Fariña will be pleased to discover something new about their
Cornell years. Perhaps sifting through minutiae and speculating with
limited information is a bit absurd; we're well aware of that and have
thus tried to approach this subject with a healthy dose of humility.
We've tried to deal with facts as much as possible and label pure
speculation appropriately; above all, this is not the final word--an
implicit question mark lurks behind every corner of the following text.

The biggest question comes near the end, where in our narrative the search for one photo leads us to the search for another....

A Research Request

10+
years ago, Daurade was working at Cornell University's Olin Library. He
doesn't recall exactly how it happened, but either he contacted or was
contacted by Englishman and Pynchon researcher Richard Lane, who at the
time ran a website calledThe Pynchon Files.Lane
asked Daurade if he could look through Cornell yearbooks for a picture
he'd heard about. One which allegedly featured a picture of Richard
Fariña and Thomas Pynchondueling. Daurade looked through the yearbooks and couldn't find the photo, so he called Lane and told him, hey, no dice.

Some time later Daurade visitedThe Pynchon Filesand
the site had been shuttered; on the homepage, instead of the usual
graph paper motif, there was a photo of a pair of duelists! Lane had
found the photo. To this day, Lane hasn't published it elsewhere, nor
did he discuss it inA Journey into the Mind of [p.], a documentary he appeared in.

Flash forward "10+ years" and Daurade had just finished readingInherent Vice.He
Googled about a bit for some background on Pynchon (again) and came
across a page featuring "all the known pictures of Thomas Pynchon". But
the duelists are not included. Daurade, using theWayback Machine, goes "way back" to 2001, looks at the photo and begins to ponder.

The
figure on the right, identified as Hochkappler, is almost certainly
Fariña. But on the left, Pynchon is not Marcel Aladar....more likely the
woman in the background! So, what to do? Look for more info on Aladar
and Hochkappler maybe.

So, Daurade Googled "Marcel Aladar" and found the following article fromThe Cornell Daily Sun, Volume LXXVI, Number 62, 17 December 1959: Once Upon a Time - A Christmas Taleby Allan A. Metcalf.

A little digging turns up that Metcalf was the editor of theSunfrom '60 to '61. Metcalf also started at Cornell on a math scholarship before turning to English (The Cornell Daily Sun, Volume LXXIV, Number 2, 24 September 1957, p. 6, "25 National Scholars... Cornellians Get Scholarships, Fellowships"), not unlike Pynchon, who started inengineeringbefore turning to English.Metcalf
graduated from Cornell with high honors in English in '61 and is now an
English professor and a leading dialect specialist with a longCV.

Despite
this use of the name Marcel Aladar, too much of a similarity to be a
coincidence, we have never seen Metcalf's name associated with either
Pynchon or Fariña, which we find puzzling; of course, it only whetted
our appetites to find out more!

Daurade began looking more closely into Fariña and came across theRichard and Mimi Fariña Homepage,which features the very same photo,surprising
Daurade enormously....and, shock of shocks, two more photos from the
same article/photo shoot! This page confirms that the photo is of Fariña
and also provides the name of the article: "Hotel Student Slain in
Early Morning Duel. Austrian Student Kills Friend in Clash Over Weekend
Date."

A good start!

The archives of theCornell Daily Sunmake it possibleto view this article(The Cornell Daily Sun,Volume
LXXV, Number 25, 24 October 1958), and the article is there on the
front page, along with our duelist photo. But page 5 offers much more:
the story told with photographs....

Preparing for the duel.

Seconds Guy du Puy and Heinrich Ludlow shake hands. Is that Pynchon on the left?

At this point, Daurade contacted The Gid--a more thorough Pynchon fan andLoSco-manager--to
let him know what he'd found. Gid turned to the Pynchon L, and found
several references to the rumor regarding the duel photo, all similar toBob Orlowsky's post (August 5, 1994):

Regarding other published Pynchon photos, Baxter Hathaway in a 1978 article in the Cornell Daily Sunrefers
to a photo of Pynchon and Farina in period costume, duelling in a
cemetery, that was published in a joke edition of the Sun in the spring
of 1959. Anybody have a copy of this?

Gid
dug around a bit on the Pynchon L, but he couldn't find any response to
Orlowsky's question; nor could he find any discussion about Lane
finding the picture (despite the fact that Lane was on the Pynchon L at
this time); nor that anyone was aware that this picture is now on the
web, which appears to be nowhere else other than theRichard and Mimi Fariña Homepage.
Gid admits to having trouble searching the Pynchon L archives, however,
so if anyone can point us to more on this or correct our findings, we'd
appreciate it!

Hathaway: The Source of the Rumor

Baxter
Hathaway was, by all accounts, a fantastic creative writing instructor.
Pynchon took a course with him at Cornell in 1959, a year after the
dueling article appeared in theSun.

When Gid tried to track down Hathaway's article, the source of the rumor, he found that most of the 1978 editions of theSunwere not online, so Daurade turned to a friend, who helped find Hathaway's article and sent us a scan (May 5, 1978, p. 31 and 38, "Hathaway Recalls Cornell Writers of the 50s").

Here is the relevant clip; we'd be happy to share the entire article with anyone who's interested.

Hathaway
is recalling a photo from 20 years prior, so we can forgive him for
adding swirling mists and getting the weapon of choice wrong. Funny,
too, that he marvels that Pynchon is capable of such "corn". He
obviously couldn't have anticipated Pynchon onThe Simpsonswith a bag over his head.

The
Hathaway article is rich in anecdote, and we'd like to take some time
to discuss it in order to provide the historical context surrounding the
photo.

The
article is entitled "Hathaway Recalls Cornell Writers of the 50s", but
the bulk of the article focuses on what Hathaway considers "the
emergence of a new generation of student writers" starting in "the
spring of 1958". Among these new writers, he focuses primarily on
Pynchon, Sale, and Fariña. Structurally, he frames his recollections
around the student protest of May, 1958, which opens and closes his
piece. He uses the protest to propel an argument that this group of
students were neitherHappy Daysnor
beatnik; they represented another path or model: "cultivated Ivy
League" but not apathetic defenders of a "bastion of Establishment
thought."

Hathaway
leads into the discussion of the 1958 writers by examining some of
their predecessors from "the period before 1957", among whom are David
Seidler and C. Michael Curtis. In these pre-1957 recollections, Hathaway
shares an interesting tale about:

The Writer,
the student literary magazine that Sukenick and Martin Washburn had
founded in 1953 to become immediately embroiled with the local
postmaster Stanley Shaw and with President Malott, who was outraged
because Sukenick had allowed a character in a story of his to utter the
word birdshit twice.

For
Hathaway, this serves as an early example of student rebellion that he
uses to build up to the more tumultuous spring of 1958.

After
this, Hathaway moves into some discussion of the faculty to provide
more background for the emerging writers of 1958. Hathaway describes the
English department as embattled. "In truth", wrote Hathaway of the
faculty members, "the writers at Cornell were on the defensive in a the
mid-fifties against the belt-tightening of the literary scholars." The
scholars won, in his view, which put Nabokov, who was apparently more of
a writer in the eyes of his peers in the department, in a bad spot.
WritingLolita,
published in France in '55 and in New York in '58, didn't help, except
that it provided Nabokov with the funds to move on -- an exodus from the
ivory tower.

After
this background, Hathaway writes that "The spring of 1958 did mark the
emergence of a new generation of student writers" -- and goes on to
discuss our heroes.

Hathaway is not, however, unique in identifying the abilities of this crew.

The Cornell School of Writers

There
are, in fact, other people who've written along similar lines as
Hathaway to describe the idea of the "Cornell school of writers";
quoting from the Richard and Mimi Fariña fan page:

In
time Pynchon and Fariña came to be regard as part of a "Cornell School"
of writers, which included David Shetzline (author of the "ecological"
novel, Heckletooth 3, and DeFord, which was also dedicated to Fariña), and M.F. Beal (author of Angel Dance,
a detective story with a Chicana lesbian investigator). Gene Bluestein
discerns three preoccupations that characterize the Cornell school:
"political paranoia (the idea of a Big Brother state), despair over the
destruction of the environment, and an awareness of the special impact
on the American mind of all levels of popular culture" [Bluestein, Gene. "Tangled Vines." (a review of Thomas Pynchon's Vineland.) The Progressive. June 1990, Vol. 54, issue 6, p. 42-3)] ...

The
most famous author associated with Cornell was of course Vladimir
Nabokov, one of the great writers of this century, who taught at Cornell
in the late fifties while Pynchon and Fariña were students there [...]
Fariña obviously emulated Nabokov's lyricality, his humor, his keen eye
for the absurd and the pathetic in modern American life, and the use of
these absurdities--rather than conventional literary devices--to tell
his story. Nabokov bridged the generations of modernism and
postmodernism, particularly in his influence on the Cornell School.
[...] Like Nabokov and Pynchon, Fariña gathers the trappings of
contemporary American life in all its tawdry plastic commercialism,
forging from the materials of pop culture a common language between
himself and his contemporary audience to tell a tale of high seriousness
through low humor. And like so many of the novels of Nabokov and
Pynchon, Fariña's novel is a quest.

Wikipedia,
also referring back to Gene Bluestein's article, mentions the Cornell
school of writers in an article on Shetzline ('56 Cornell grad who was
friends with Pynchon and Sale):

This
school of writing has been defined through as having three
preoccupations (1) socio-political paranoia, (2) concern with
environmental degradation, and (3) awareness of popular culture’s unique
impact on the American mind. In addition to Pynchon and Fariña, the
Cornell School would also include Mary F. Beal, to whom Shetzline was
married. The Cornell School could also be said to include, or be
influenced by, Vladimir Nabokov and Kurt Vonnegut. It stands in contrast
to older literary traditions of that university, such as the literary
traditions represented by E.B. White and Hiram Corson.

This
is all very interesting, but to be honest, we like Hathaway's sense
that something new was happening in the spring on 1958. And we think
that it not only has to do with the talent of the 1958 students and
staff, combined with their predecessors who were both Ivy League and
rebel ... we think it has some thing to do with "The Riot."

The Riot

The demonstrations broke out Friday and Saturday [at Cornell] in protest against a proposed ban on mixed parties in off-campus apartments of male students.

About 3,000 students burned the university president in effigy, and half that number later stormed his home, pelted it with stones and threw a smoke bomb inside.

- New York Times, 27 May 1958, p. 20

In
the spring of 1958, the group of emerging writers that Hathaway praised
started a student protest that culminated (or perhaps splintered) into a
riot. Several of the emerging writers were suspended: J. Kirk Sale,
Richard Fariña, Robert Perry, and David Seidler.

Chapter 6ofThe Chimes Freedom Flashingprovides some more detail of the protest/riot:

And
way back in 1958 Cornell students rang out the Victorian era on campus
with an uprising against the strict rules governing interaction between
men and "co-eds," as fairly accurately chronicled in Richard Fariña's
novel,Been Down So Long It Seems Like Up To Me.
Led by an angry faculty brat who later became a distinguished author,
Kirkpatrick Sale, hundreds of students disrupted classes to protest
rules such as having to leave the door open and the lights on when women
visited a fraternity room, and threw eggs at the Dean who tried to calm
them. Then some 3,000 students, nearly all the male undergraduate
population, surrounded a women's dormitory at night, protecting women
who refused to abide by their curfew. Finally, a thousand marched off
under torch-light a mile to the home of President Deane Malott to demand
an end to these "parietal" rules.

"P and I, P and I" they chanted, referring to one dean's argument that any relaxation in the rules would lead to "petting and intercourse."

"Students Stone Head of Cornell" read the national headlines, and the alumni, politicians, and pundits bayed for the blood of the barbarians. But all they got was a few suspensions, while the students got the complete disposal of parietal rules and the appointment of a new Dean of Students. As quick as a wink, the impossible was reality: in loco parentis, with its condescending control of private life, was only a memory.

In loco parentis was on its last legs, and again, it's not only a precursor to the waves of often violent demonstration that rocked American campuses in the 60's--but of the changing sexual mores of young people. The protest may seem a bit silly, the whining of a group of privileged college kids, but it was ultimately about sexual freedom, women's liberation, and a resistance to authority interfering too much in students' personal lives. To give a bit of context, the issues that led to the riots hung over the campus like a thick smoke for years and would have informed the these young people's sensibilities. Some of the most pointed commentary in The Cornell Daily Sun came from joke articles in joke editions of the paper, like "WEEKEND OF SIN! Halfway Down The Gorge--In SLIME and FILTH!" (Vol. LXXV, No. 141, 15 May 1959, p. 2, by Hermione Dopkit as told to Stan Werbul). References to depravity abound, surely a hyperbolic punch at the "P and I" so feared by the anonymous dean. Hell, Fariña wrote whole novel built around the protest and was eventually charged as a result of his role in leading it.

Now that we've offered some context--let's look at the long-rumored dueling photo that appeared in the Sun.

Student Slain in Early Morning Duel

The photos appear in an article in The Cornell Daily Sun, which is
the oldest independent college daily in America, published since 1890
and staffed entirely by students. Many members of its staff have gone
on to prominent careers in print and broadcast journalism--there are at
least 9 Pulitzer Prize winners among its alumni--but E.B. White and Kurt
Vonnegut are probably its most easily-recognizable names. Like many
college newspapers, theSunperiodically issues parody editions (e.g.,24 October 1958,15 May 1959, and12 May 1961) for occasions such as April Fool's Day or Spring Day (a Cornell tradition).

The
article about the duel is one of these joke articles; it appeared in
October 24, 1958, a few months after the riot. The
photos accompanying the article include six people who are given
fictional names:Hermann
Hochkappler '59; Marcel Aladar '60; Carol Huntington '62; Dr. Ivan
Cbarl; as well as Guy du Puy and Heinrich Ludlow (the seconds). Who are
these six people, and what can we learn by digging into the history of
these friends? We've organized our findings around the six.

Hermann Hochkappler '59: Richard Fariña

As we noted earlier, theRichard and Mimi Fariña Homepageidentifies "Hochkappler" as Fariña, which supports our own conclusion. The Richard and Mimi Fariña page also pegs Fariña as theauthorof
the article; although we're not sure about this, we can tentatively
accept it. If, however, anyone is able to offer any concrete analysis
of the article, we'd love to hear it!

Richard Fariña was an accomplished folk musician, releasing two albums with his wife Mimi. His novelBeen Down So Long It Looks Like Up to Mewas
published in 1966. Two days after its publication, on the day of a
book-signing event and Mimi's 21st birthday, he was killed in a
motorcycle accident. This was April 30, 1966. Pynchon was a pall bearer at his funeral and later dedicatedGravity's Rainbowto him. He also wrote the forward to the (most?) recent re-edition of Fariaña's odd and disconcerting novel. In that intro, Pynchon wrote:

We
showed up once at a party, not a masquerade party, in disguise--he as
Hemingway, I as Scott Fitzgerald, each of us aware that the other had
been through a phase of enthusiasm for his respective author. I suppose
by then I was learning from Farina how to be amused at some of my
obsessions.

Clearly,
dressing up in disguise was something Fariña did on at least one
occasion other than the photo shoot, consistent with his participation
in theater. InA Journey Into the Mind of [p.],
a California bookseller relates that in the early 70's, Pynchon
frequented his shop; after being recognized on one occasion, Pynchon
later returneddisguised as a woman!
Who knows what to make of that? Another person interviewed for the
film states that at a Pynchon look-alike contest years later, a shady
character showed up who everyone thought was Pynchon, then fled when
people kept looking his way. Turns out it wasn't Pynchon. Our
bookseller may have made the same mistake. What we find interesting is
that wearing disguises and costumes is an idea that re-appears
periodically in anecdotes about Pynchon, from 1958 up until the very
recent past, whenhe voiced a cartoon version of himselfonThe Simpsons--with a paper bag over his head.

Mimi
Fariña (née Baez), was Joan Baez's sister. They were all thick as
thieves with Bob Dylan during a period chronicled in Hadju'sPositively 4th Street: The Lives and Times of Joan Baez, Bob Dylan, Mimi Baez Farina and Richard Farina.
In a weird coincidence, Dylan had a serious motorcycle accident on July
29, 1966, almost two months to the day after Fariña was killed. One
wonders what might have happened had their fates been reversed. Fariña
may have become a rock icon like Dylan, or a novelist with the stature
of a Vonnegut, Roth or Pynchon.

When
Daurade searched the Internet for "Hermann Hochkappler" or merely
"Hochkappler", nothing came back. But Gid later came up with a
"Hochkoeppler" (a suggestion from Google), who was at Cornell at roughly
the same time as the crew in these photos. He would have been leaving
Cornell as they were coming in. This is relevant because Axel
Hohkoeppler was on theSun'sNews Board in 1954-55.
He graduated in '55 in hotel management and soon after founded the
Alianza Football Club in El Salvador (he played varsity soccer as
goalkeeper in '53;Sun). Given this connection to theSun, it's quite possible he was the inspiration for the name "Hochkappler" used in the duel photo shoot.

Marcel Aladar, '60

Despite all the rumors, Aladar looks nothing like Pynchon! Who could he be?

The
most tantalizing lead we found, as we noted earlier, was that Metcalf
wrote a story featuring a character named "Marcel Aladar". Perhaps this
was Metcalf's fictional alter-ego; Metcalf, however, graduated in '61,
one year after the fictional duellist Marcel Aladar was pegged to
graduate. Perhaps it was a stock character, or merely a name, to be
used as an in-joke among friends.

Gid also found a mention in theSunof Metcalf acting in a production (The Cornell Daily Sun, Volume LXXV, Number 24, 23 October 1958, p. 2, "Savoyards to Present Satire; Announce Cast for 'Patience"
by [uncredited]), so the idea of dressing up in costume and playing a
part may have been familiar to him. As we alluded to earlier, Fariña
also acted in Cornell productions, so they might have also known each
other from the theater as well as from theSun.

Note, however, that in Metcalf'sChristmas Tale,
Aladar is a foreign professor with a butterfly collection--presumably
representing Vladimir Nabokov. (Note, too, that Nabokov wrote a story
called "Christmas Story", although we haven't been able to find an
English translation prior to 1994. Can anyone out there confirm this?)

This
brings us to an interesting digression that ties into the faculty
strife mentioned in Hathaway's article (which we discussed earlier in
this post). In Metcalf's tale, an eagle named "Hubert" seems to be a
physical manifestation of Aladar/Nabokov's intellectual imagination,
swooping about campus and scaring students. "Hubert" surely refers to
"Humbert" fromLolita,which was released in the U.S.only a couple months priorto
the printing of Metcalf's tale -- and only a few months after the riot.
We imagine that the timing could not have been worse. Lolitacaused quite a stir, and not everyone was happy to have its author on the Cornell faculty.

In
Metcalf's tale, Professor Aladar enjoys having students over for
Christmas, but in the end, Hubert and he are crushed by a few students
who'd rather make out with womenthan follow the professor's lead. These students unleash a bear on Aladar.

In
real life, only five months earlier, Cornell students had unleashed
their anger against the administration; their protest/riot against
dormitory/sorority regulations for female students was presented in the
national news as students rioting for sex.

Metcalf's
tongue-in-cheek "Aladar" article could be taken in many ways, perhaps
more than we can imagine (who or what for example, Gid is forced to ask
in his ignorance, is Carmichael?). Should we conflate the story's
presentation of students kept on campus during Christmas with Cornell'sin loco parentispolicy which helped trigger the riot? Is Metcalf suggesting a schizoid administration, one that employs the author ofLolitaand,
at the same time, fears its own students' sexuality? Is the tale also a
gentle, albeit sympathetic, jab at Nabokov, written for an audience
well aware of Nabokov's comic portrayal of the hapless college professor
inPnin? (Full disclosure: I haven't readPnin, so please take my question for what it is--a genuine question. - Gid)

Now
why on Earth would a young student--one presumably interested in
pursuing literature after school--want to make what might be construed
as a jab at Nabokov? Looking back in theSunabout one year prior, Gid found aLetter to Editorby Nabokov, written in response to an article by Metcalf (Volume LXXV, Number 21, 20 October 1958, p. 4, "Letter A G. S. Man").
In this letter, Nabokov sets out to "correct two misstatements in Mr.
Metcalf's article". Was Metcalf thrilled at the attention by an esteemed
professor? Upset about the criticism? Or nonplussed, a cool-headed
future editor of the paper?

Keep
in mind that Metcalf was young at the time, and we certainly do not
mean to criticize; hell, he's certainly way more accomplished than
either of us, in ways that Gid admires.

So help us out here! Does anyone know who Aladar is?

Carol Huntington '62

We haven't identified the young woman in the photos.

Could she beDiane Divers '59? This is pure speculation based on similarities to a photo of her from her college days that we found intheRichard and Mimi Fariña Homepage, which describes her as "a student to whom Richard was engaged briefly. Her parents disapproved of the marriage (seePositively 4th Street,p. 42)."

She
was, like so many other Cornellians in this post, quite accomplished,
becoming an author, political scientist, and at one point President of
the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.She
was rather tight with the Clintons and worked on Al Gore's re-election
campaign. Like many of the young women in the Cornell crew, Divers
strikes us as quite remarkable, especially for her timeShe was at the vanguard of a generation of women moving into positions of authority in the public sphere.

The
problem with this identification, however, is that Divers and
Huntington were said to have been three years apart at Cornell. Not
that this disqualifies her, but it's a disconnect we can't ignore.

Dr. Ivan Cbarl

Take a look at the duel photos, where Dr. Ivan Cbarl is looking over the dead Aladar. Could this be
Pynchon? It's possible, but du Puy looks more like Pynchon to us,
and even that's far from clear. We would certainly welcome your input!

A
reasonable question is, “Why does it even matter? Leave the guy
alone--he has clearly asked for his image to be private.” We agree--but
the question intrigues us because, well, how cool would it be to track
down potentially unknown written works from Pynchon or Fariña's
college days? That said, we don't feel we're being intrusive, given
that these photos are over fifty years old, but this concern has
definitely been a part of our "behind the scenes" discussion as this
post has developed.

Okay--now bear with us for a somewhat lengthy discussion of Cbarl.

Gid tried to track down the source of this name and found out that there was a fellow namedCarl P. Leubsdorfwho was at Cornell during the same time as Pynchon and Fariña, and he wrote for theSun. It turns out that his name was misprinted as "Cbarl P. Leubsdorf" right before the duel article appeared:The Cornell Daily Sun, Volume LXXV, Number 2, 23 September 1958, p. 11, "Construction Date Still Vague For Starting $6 Million Library"
(Cbarl P. Leubsdorf). Did, perhaps, someone see the typo, and, amused
by the error, co-opt it for the doctor’s name in the duel?

Looking further, we found this Letter to the Editor, which was credited to Ivan F. Cbarl, ’59, New Orleans: The Cornell Daily Sun, Volume 77, Number 47, 22 November 1960, p. 4, "Letters to the Editor"

I
am often amused that Republicans tend to view politics with the
righteous indignation displayed in Mr. Simpson’s letter of Nov. 15.
While the column by Mr. Sarobin undoubtedly overstated the case, an
editorial writer’s prerogative as Mr. Simpson should know, I can hardly
agree it is "the most self-righteous and the most obnoxious piece" that
has ever appeared in the SUN.

The
emptiness of Mr. Simpson’s protest is revealed in his comment that
Richard Nixon’s career is no match for those of what he calls "such
recent great figures" in the Republican party as Hoover, Taft, Dewey, or
President Eisenhower himself." In other words, Mr. Nixon scarcely
merited election to the Presidency. Indeed, the only things to be
regretted about the election are that more than 33,000,000 Americans
(including Mr. Simpson) thought Mr. Nixon worthy of the Presidency and
that considerable circles in the GOP still think he is and should run
again in 1964.

—Ivan F. Cbarl ‘59

New Orleans, La.

Is the photo of Cbarl actually Pynchon? As we said a moment ago, probably not, but we still wonder who wrote thisLetter to the Editor.

More
clues: "Ivan F. Cbarl, '59, New Orleans" … That's the year Pynchon
graduated (along with many others mentioned in this post). The letter
was written in November, 1960. Pynchon was working for Boeing at the
time, so we'd guess that he was in Seattle when this letter was written.
Note, however, that the first story in Slow Learner, which was published in '59 in theCornell Writer,
was set in New Orleans. A final possible clue is that the letter calls
the paper "SUN", which is exactly how the paper, capitalized letters and
all, is referred to in the article about the dueling students; this
style of capitalizing "SUN", however, was likely common practice in a
time when people wrote on manual typewriters and italics were the domain
of the professional printer.

Okay--so
that letter may be a bit of a bore. But here’s one that may be a little
more interesting. The name "Ivan Cbarl" also pops up as a Russian spy
in another joke article, this one about the sinking of the Cornell crew
(rowing team):The Cornell Daily Sun, Volume LXXV, Number 141, 15 May 1959, p. 14,Cornellians Search for Lost Shell... Crew Goes Down In Weird Lake Storm”
(P. M. Namrehs). We couldn’t find the author, P. M. Namrehs, anywhere
else. If anyone else can, please let us know! Meanwhile, we suspect that
the name is a pseudonym.Pynchon's
early published materials show an interest in spies, which is a
circumstantial link at best, but it's a tantalizing one.

So who wrote this? That’s the $10,000 question. Could this be written by Pynchon or Fariña? If not, then by whom?

Guy du Puy and Heinrich Ludlow

Guy
du Puy and Heinrich Ludlow are the seconds in the pictures. They're the
fellows in the top hats shaking hands. The article doesn't make it
entirely clear who is who. Aladar, however, is identified as French and
Hochkappler is identified as Austrian. Based simply on the seconds'
names, Heinrich Ludlow might be paired Hochkappler and Guy du Puy with
Aladar. In other words, we suspect that du Puy is the shorter of the
two, the one with the black tie, the one in middle of the second to last
picture.

Is
it possible that the taller of the two seconds is Pynchon, merely based
on looks? Pynchon is invariably described as tall and dark-haired; the
general morphology of the body and head are consistent with known
photos of Pynchon. But in one photo, the top hat and (false?) facial
hair make it difficult to identify him positively, and in the other, all
we see is the top of the head. Regarding that facial hair, Pynchon did supposedly have a"Wyatt Earp-type handlebar mustache" while at Boeing, whichhe supposedly keptwhile
in Mexico. Did Pynchon have a mustache in college? If not, might
costuming be a "try it before you buy it" moment? (Maybe this is just
being silly, but hell, when it comes to Pynchon, speculation about
minutiae is almostde rigeur.) It is tempting to suppose that these obfuscations actually support the idea that it isPynchon,
but of course while this kind of speculation may be amusing, it's far
from conclusive. Still, if we were to bet on which person in this
photo-shoot is Pynchon, we'd put our money on Heinrich Ludlow.

Gid dug around for the names of the characters in other editions of theSunfrom the relevant time period. He found numerous Heinrich's in theSunduring
the late '50s to early '60s, but none seem relevant. There is also an
article by Kirk Sale which reviews fiction by Fariña and Seidler and
mentions a character named Ludlow, although the character is in a story
not written by anyone mentioned in our article (Vol. LXXIV, Number 112, 7
April 1958, p. 4, "Literary Review Modern Techniques in Short Stories" by Sale).

Gid
also found what Daurade suggested are some potentially promising
mentions of Hadley S. De Puy, a school official during the relevant time
period:

De
Puy seems like a possible candidate as the source of the name du Puy.
He was the University Coordinator of Residences in 1958 and would have
been a likely target for the satires of Sale and Fariña, et al., given
his role in enforcing Cornell'sin loco parentis policies.

Other People to Consider?

Who
else might be in this series of photos? The Richard and Mimi page list a
host of people who were friends of Fariña and who may have been
involved and we're indebted to the list on their site. Manyfriends of Pynchon andFariñawereinvolved in theSun,
fiercely intelligent and went on to make a pretty good careers for
themselves. The more we looked into this, the longer the list grew! We
left off many people who were closely involved with this group, some
because they graduated before the dueling pictures were taken, others
because, well, we had to limit the scope somehow or another. Let us know
how we did here. Did we leave off anyone you thought we should have
included?

C. Michael Curtis'56One time roommate of Fariña who went on to become fiction editor atThe Atlantic Monthly. He was also a Sun contributor.

Kirkpatrick Sale'58was also a roommate of Fariña and had co-written an article with him which culminated in a demonstration against thein loco parentispolicies of Cornell. He was the Associate Editor of theSun(1956-57) and Editor-in-Chief (1957-58).

Sale has been described as having a"philosophy
unified by decentralism" and as being "a leader of the
Neo-Luddites", an "anti-globalization leftist," and "the theoretician
for a new secessionist movement."Some of these labels bring to mind some of the concerns addressed in Pynchon's novels.

Indeed, Sale collaborated with Pynchon on an (unfinished) sci-fi musical about a futurist dystopia--Minstral Island. A manuscript of this piece can be found at the Harry Ransom Center in Austin and a discussion of the work can be found here:http://themodernword.com/pynchon/paper_gibbs.html.
This article does a good job of showing how and why we analyze the
unpublished works of college kids who go on to write great stuff.

Ultimately,
this is why we got interested in this photo. Sure, the photo is
interesting in and of itself, but more importantly, it provides a
window, an access point for the goings on of an elite group of students
who went on to bigger and better things in the American literary
establishment. If Minstral Islandis a jagged look at concerns Pynchon and Sale would address throughout their lives, mightn't theSunarticles also have some use, however minimal, in that regard? To see these young people cutting their teeth in theSunopens up exhilarating possibilities.

Here's a rather lengthy quote from Gibbs' article onMinstral Island.

Since
collaborating with Pynchon on Minstral Island, Sale developed and
deepened his nascent skepticism of technology to a fine degree. In
addition to his environmental writings and work—he founded the New York
State Green Party—he has written many critiques of the pervasiveness of
technology and society’s deference to the machine

Minstral
Island introduces themes and worries that concern Pynchon still, too,
but his collaboration with Sale may be most notable for being his
earliest known work to feature show-stopping musical numbers. Characters
in Pynchon’s novels are like people, but they are also actors on a
stage, straight men, hams, and stars, all giving voice to their outsized
feelings and their author’s big ideas.

.....Minstral
Island, as shabby and unfortunately incomplete as it stands, follows in
the dissenting spirit of Frankenstein, a novel that Pynchon, writing in
“Is It Okay to Be a Luddite?” calls a great example of Luddite
literature, “warning of what can happen when technology, and those who
practice it, get out of hand.”

Suspicion
of technology, particularly its pernicious effects on politics and
individuality, surfaces repeatedly in Pynchon’s fiction and essays. In
his introduction for a new edition of 1984, published for Orwell’s
centennial, Pynchon writes of the problems faced by fascist states when
controlling desire.

[...]
one folder of handwritten and typed notes, outlines, and draft
fragments of an unpublished, unfinished musical written by Pynchon and
his friend, John Kirkpatrick Sale. The materials date to spring 1958 and
were written while both Pynchon and Sale were attending Cornell
University.

Needless to say, we'd like to get a hold of that stuff!

Faith Apfelbaum Sale'58is said to have been the first to actually suggest a demonstration; she went on to be an editor for Pynchon, Vonnegut, Joseph Heller and Amy Tan, among others. She died of cancer in 1999 at the age of 63.

Stephanie Greene'59. There is contemporary a children's author with this name, but we're not entirely sure it's the same person.

Kristin Osterholm White Gould'57was killed on 9-11 on Flight 93. She was a freelance journalist who also had fun writing for theNational Enquirer.
An elegant, well-travelled, aventurous polyglot, she was friends with
Frank McCourt, and her efforts helped to raise awareness of his memoirAngela's Ashes, which later won the Pulitzer Prize

David Leshan'59is, we believe, a teacher, and recently had a piece published in theNew York Times.

David Seidler'59.Quoting Cleaver (see later in this post):David Seidler ... broke with Dick because he felt Dick was a fraud as a writer. Seidler was extraordinary as a prosist[sic]and psychologist and was preoccupied with Napoleon in his exile.

Seidler is a screenwriter whose credits includeThe King's Speech.

David
was one of the four students charged along with Sale for his role in
the Cornell demonstration. The other two included Robert Perry '59andPeter Wheelwright'61.
(Four students were suspended on May 27: Sale, Farina, Robert M. Perry
'59 and Seidler. Peter Wheelwright '61 was "temporarily suspended".)

Bob Wegryn'59. Wegryn, MD, is a general surgeon in New Jersey; he was theSunphotographer who shot the duel photos. He wason the staffat the same time as the Sales and Osterholm.

Paul Nunn Cleaver wrote an article that discusses Seidler, Sale, Lesham, Osterholm and a Todd Perry, among others, who could have been in these pictures. This Todd Perry could have been the Robert Perry charged in the wake of the riot (see for example, here, and note that both Todd/Tod and Robert Perry seem to have links to Florida). Note that Hathaway spells "Tod" with done "d". Anyone out there know if Robert was also called "Tod" or "Todd?" There doesn't seem to be much about him. Cleaver indicates he died of alcoholism, but he seems to have taken second place in the 2012 Robert Frost Poetry and Haiku Contest). Hathaway identifies him as a poet and refers to a "triumvirate" of "Pynchon-Farina-[Tod] Perry" before dropping discussion of Perry altogether. Likewise, Michael C. Curtis also says"With 'the whole sick crew' there was Tom Pynchon and Farina, and Tod Perry." Was Perry indeed that close with Pynchon and Fariña, or are these statements in error, considering that Hathaway's was an outsider's take (at least from the perspective of this circle of friends) and both quotes are recollections of events from many years ago?

Cleaver, by the way, is now a hotelier in Mexico, and he discusses also his friendship with Fariña in a profile found onthis page.
Cleaver himself could also have been in the pictures, come to think of
it; he was close enough to Fariña to travel with him on a few
occasions. His recollections are worth reading.

The Bombshell

Finding
the Hathaway article we thought, brought us something like full circle,
the source of this rumor and hence, Daurade's contact with Lane that
started this whole goose chase off.

Or
does it? Just one a whim, we decided to Google some other names to see
what came up. Just when we thought this thing was finished, we founda reference to another heretofore unknown photo of Pynchon! A fellow alum states there's an article in a national daily about the riots with a photo of Fariña, Sale and Pynchon.

Is this possible?

We're
trying to track this photo down, of course. We didn't want to wait
until we found it to post this piece, but we didn't want to get scooped
as a result of giving the details away, either. We'll do what we can to
find it and, if our searches are fruitless, we'll post the name of the
article and where we found the reference. We apologize for this. The
reference certainly exists. If the photo actually exists is another
story....

What Else Can We Say?

It's
important here to state a few things in conclusion. Pynchon has made it
clear that he wants to protect his privacy. We don't want to invade it
like paparazzi. It is said, however, that in the wake ofGravity's Rainbow, an article in theSoho Voiceproposed
that Pynchon was J.D. Salinger. It is reported that his written
response was "Not bad. Keep trying." Isn't that kind of, at the very
least, not an explicit "don't try"? This is all 50+years
ago, a relatively well-documented period of Pynchon's life. If we can
turn up juvenalia from Fariña and Pynchon, we feel that's a worthwhile
thing, but we don't want to step on anybody's toes while doing it.
We're not going to bug old friends or anything like that, but we do feel
our researches fall within the bounds of decency. If this didn't
involve Pynchon, no one would think twice about it. We have to strike a
fair balance between the man's obvious wishes and the interest this
information might hold for scholars and fans. We sincerely hope we
don't offend anybody else involved in this story by making these
speculations. Many of these people are still active in various
professions and we don't want to bring them any unwanted attention.

We
should also recall here that Richard Lane found one of these duel
photos over ten years ago and published it online. Despite it being
mentioned on a list-serve upon which he was posting, he
hasn't spoken about it since. Perhaps he concluded it wasn't Pynchon
and left it at that. That said, that it still remains a mystery or
"rumour" puzzles us a bit--the photo is already online on one website
and can be viewed in theSunarchives.
This is all quite public and we're amazed no one else has presented it
yet. Same goes for the Baxter Hathaway article. Quite a few people
refer to it, but no one ever seems to have shared the actual text.
Which again, is puzzling. We got a hold of it in less than a day. If
you want it, leave your email address in a comment and we'll send you
the .PDF. We understand the temptation to keep things under one's hat,
like with our newly-found reference to yet another unknown photo. But
we promise thatonce we've
gone through the relevant sources, we will share it posthaste; that is,
if we find it. If not, we'll give all the info we have so that some
other enterprising soul can dig it up. Fair? We think so, even if we
do feel a bit funny about it.

We'd
also like to know as much about this pantheon of characters and
pseudonyms as possible; it could be an important footnote in late
20th-century American Literature. Aladar, Cbarl, Hochkappler, Ludlow,
du Puy, Huntington....what other adventures did they get into?

On
a final note, we're not professional journalists or academics, merely
curious fans. We may have overlooked some things and/or misinterpreted
some things. We hope that you, fans and scholars, will get in touch with
us to offer your insights. We'd also like to hear from the people this
story concerns; we may actually contact some, but we'd rather they
contactusto share their stories and shed some light on the heady salad days of a fine group of writers and thinkers.

17 comments:

That Wyatt Earp mustache bit might be myth. His editor at the Bomarc Service News, E. A. Hixson told the author of an article about what Pynchon wrote for the Service News that Pynchon was “a very neat person, slender with a small mustache.” I'll get you the title of the article. I'd dig that Hathaway article bencanard2000 at yahoo dot com. Oh you can get the Pynchon/Sale play if you go to Austin; the library doesn't make it difficult.

Thanks for your input, Ben! I think with Pynchon, it's hard to separate myth from reality, even when it comes to testimony from people who knew him. As for the mustache, maybe it got a little longer later in the sixties? I read somewhere that in Mexico locals called him "Pancho Villa". Who knows if that's true or not? Like the Hathaway article....there's been a legend built around what he describes, which is totally wrong!

Did you get that article in yr email?

I'd love to read the article about Bomarc, if you have the title. As for Austin, I have two old pals who live there so it may be possible to get a hold of that box!

I'd eventually like to upload the Hathaway thing to an LoS Scribd account, maybe along with the article you are talking about. And why not the Austin material, if that's allowed.

I wouldn't upload the Austin material. The library at UofT forbids it for one thing, but there are also copyright issues. P has been very good about not pursuing people uploading stories or articles, but those things were all published. He might have a different attitude about some unfinished college juvenilia. The mexico mustache and Pancho Villa stories come from Jules Siegel's Playboy article.

"We couldn’t find the author, P. M. Namrehs, anywhere else. If anyone else can, please let us know! Meanwhile, we suspect that the name is a pseudonym"

"Namrehs" is "Sherman" spelled backwards.

http://cdsun.library.cornell.edu/cgi-bin/cornell?a=d&d=CDS19590528-01.2.21&srpos=62&e=01-01-1957-01-01-1961---20--61-byDA--IN-Sherman----#Lists a "Peter M. Sherman '61" as on the "Sports Board" of the paper.

Mr. Perry, I for one am glad to hear that and sincerely apologize for repeating the incorrect speculation of another. We did have our doubts, given the haiku contest in 2012. Was that you? I know my comrade will have a bunch of questions for you, but would you care to comment on anything in this post? I hope it doesn't offend you that we are writing about your life at Cornell. We'd be honored if you want to write a bit about what we got right and wrong. If you prefer, email us: stevenmadkins (at) hotmail.com and/or dpayne1912 (at) hotmail.com. Thanks so much for contacting us and best regards, Steven.

Thanks for your comment. We certainly ran across your post on randi.org while preparing this article--I remember Gid pointing it out to me. I'm surprised we didn't mention or link to it, to be honest--maybe we did? Any progress on the Judy Collins book? I wonder if that's a myth or not?

I still think one of the people in these pics is Pynchon, even though Tod Perry and Carl Leubsdorf indicate otherwise...did you read those interviews? Both guys were very gracious and generous with time and information. All thanks to the internet!

I'll soon be posting an interview with a friend of mine who was an early Discordian, a friend of Roberts Anton Wilson and Shea, if that's a subject of interest to you. That should be done some time in August.

Pages

Total Pageviews

Places to avoid

Privacy Policy

This blog does not share personal information with third parties nor do we store any information about your visit to this blog other than to analyze and optimize your content and reading experience through the use of cookies.

You can turn off the use of cookies at anytime by changing your specific browser settings.

We are not responsible for republished content from this blog on other blogs or websites without our permission.

Laws of Silence is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to amazon.com.

This privacy policy is subject to change without notice and was last updated on April 23, 2014. If you have any questions feel free to contact me directly here: stevenmadkins [at] hotmail.com.